Ok so it’s a bit of a long title. When you import a virtual machine into vCloud Director from the underlying vCenter Server you can remap the network as mentioned in my previous blog post Import VMs from vCenter to vCloud Director using PowerCLI. This works great up to the point when you have more than

I thought I would just post a quick article to say I have written a guide on how to deal with hidden VMware snapshots. It’s quite technical and hopefully should allow you to be able to resolve any hidden snapshot issues you may come across. When I talk about hidden snapshots I am talking about

If you want to upgrade the network drivers within ESXi 5 follow these simple steps. First off you need the name of the vmnic that you want to upgrade. Run this to display a list of installed network adapters currently in use. # esxcfg-nics -l This will return something similar to below. You then need

This is part 3 of my guide, you can read part 1 here and part 2 here Availability High Availability (HA) New features with HA include heartbeat Datastores and support for IPv6. A heartbeat datastore is great because it helps to prevent situations where the management network drops out but the virtual machines continue running on the virtual

This is part 2 of my guide, you can read part 1 here Storage Quite a few improvements have been made to storage with vSphere 5. Storage Profiles Profile driven storage allows SLAs to be set to certain storage types, For example this together with Storage DRS (explained below) can be used to automatically keep

vSphere 5 has been available for a couple of months now so now is an ideal time to look at upgrading your infrastructure and also to start the upgrade path for the VCP 4s out there to the VCP5. This is by no means a complete study guide, rather an introduction into the various new